it's had a long relationship with the country i've been involved with, the united states, france, and it's like a desperately poor place. and when these terrible disasters happen in a very poor place, the result is magnified over and over and over and over what it would be in a country that is more accessible with more infrastructure so on and so forth. this is a huge, massive disaster for one of the poorest, poorest countries and it's so poor, it's very hard to describe how poor it is compared to all the other countries in that hemisphere. >> larry: well, we're raising a lot of money for haiti tonight, and that's the number one thing, as you know, that they need. what have been your feelings as you watch this disaster? >> well, you know, an earthquake is, it's like the most incredibly physically damaging, but it's also very psychologically damaging, because the ground beneath your feet, everything happeningi int you is destroyed in those moments and your whole psyche is upset. and then, of course, the tremendous physical damage, because the buildings are so poorly constructed, as typ